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Still Not Clear Which Party Will Lose the House
Townhall.com ^ | August 10, 2018 | Michael Barone

Posted on 08/10/2018 8:50:37 AM PDT by Kaslin

We're heading into the home stretch in America's unusually lengthy (six months and nine days) primary election season. Some three-quarters of Americans have had a chance to vote for Democratic and Republican candidates for Congress, and state and local offices.

Their choices tell us something about the results in November. But not everything, including which party will win the apparently close battle for a majority in the House of Representatives.

The consensus of those who follow these elections most closely is that the Democrats will win. The most recent evidence comes from the ultra-narrow victory of Republican State Sen. Troy Balderson in the special election for Ohio's 12th Congressional District.

Balderson beat Democrat Danny O'Connor 50 to 49 percent, only a 1 percent margin, in a district that gave President Donald Trump an 11 percent margin in 2016 and Mitt Romney a 10 percent margin in 2012.

Ohio 12 is one of those hybrid districts, about half suburban and half urban, about half rural and half small-town. It includes part of the Ohio State University campus and affluent northern suburbs of Columbus, the Midwest's fastest-growing major metro area, plus most or all of several counties to the north and east.

Romney carried both suburbs and small counties by modest margins. Trump got whacked in the affluent suburbs but won the small counties by overwhelming margins.

On Tuesday, and even more in early voting, Democrat O'Connor carried upscale suburban precincts by robust 2-1 margins. Republican Balderson ran well but not as far ahead as Trump, amid lower turnout in the small counties.

Another way to put it: Republicans get the worst showings of both of their last two nominees, losing even further ground among white college graduates while failing to duplicate Trump's gains among whites non-college graduates.

That pattern was discernible in earlier special elections and makes it easy to see how Democrats could win a House majority. It's widely attributed to Trump's combative and provocative style.

Another way to put it: Republicans get the worst showings of both of their last two nominees, losing even further ground among white college graduates while failing to duplicate Trump's gains among whites non-college graduates.

There's something to that, of course, but not everything. The voter shifts from Romney 2012 to Trump 2016 were actually small by historic standards, and the steadiness of Republican and Democratic percentages in the two-plus decades since 1994 have been historically small, with a steady increase in straight-ticket voting till 2016.

What we've also seen in congressional elections since the middle 1990s is a resistance to one-party control. With close presidential elections, only a few voters need to defect in the off year to produce this result, and except for the contests just after 9/11, they have.

Former President Bill Clinton faced Republican Houses and Senates for six of his eight years in office. Then-President George W. Bush's Republicans gained seats in 2002, but he faced a Democratic House for two years and a Democratic Senate for three and a half. Former President Barack Obama faced a Republican House for six of eight years and a Republican Senate for two

You can ascribe the losses of each president's party as the predictable result of some combination of extremist overreach, legislative fecklessness, personal scandals and suspicion of insiders. But for one reason or another, they keep happening and could again this year, when Republicans could lose their House majority and might conceivably, despite their advantage in seats, lose the Senate, too.

But there's reason to be cautious about predictions. Republicans' big gains weren't visible at this point in the 1994 cycle (I wrote the first article predicting they might win a majority, in July), nor were Democrats' big gains in 2006 or Republicans' sweep of Senate seats in 2014.

Nor are area polls this far out always a reliable guide to November. Except in early June, Democrats have had a 6 to 8 percent lead all year in the RealClearPolitics generic congressional vote poll average. But it's suddenly down to the lower end of that range, numbers that could produce a Republican majority in the House (because Democratic voters are demographically clustered in relatively few districts).

Does that signal a genuine shift in sentiment, or is it just statistical noise? No one knows for sure. Corporate America seems to be joining with affluent Trump haters to give Democrats a significant money edge in many key races. But then, the smart money was overwhelmingly on the side of Hillary Clinton two years ago.

In that race, like the House races this year, Democrats started off ahead in turnout, but Republicans managed to squeak out just enough votes in the right places to win -- as they did in Ohio 12 this week, and may or may not in November.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2018midterms; alections; barone; elections
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To: Deplorable American1776

I can safely say that should the Demodummies lose, their cheating schemes have failed once again. Just ask Hitlary!


21 posted on 08/10/2018 10:14:53 AM PDT by DaveA37
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To: Kaslin

Let help you Mister Political Genius, when the smoke of the wreckage of the Democrat party clears they will have been reduced to what they were 100 years ago.


22 posted on 08/10/2018 10:24:06 AM PDT by jmaroneps37 (Conservatism is truth. Liberalism is lies.)
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To: laplata
"...They know how critical this election is..."

I can't think of an election since at least 1964 in which I was not told repeatedly that "this was the most important, most critical, last chance to save the country or must win election of all time.

They are all important and they are all critical.

That warning-like being called a racist, homophobe, xenophobe or sexist-is losing the power that it once had.

23 posted on 08/10/2018 10:29:39 AM PDT by skimbell
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To: Kaslin

Barone could have written his column in four short sentences:

About the 2018 election...

I’m not sure about anything.

And click on my column so I can make money $$$$

Thank you.


24 posted on 08/10/2018 10:43:40 AM PDT by sergeantdave (Teach a man to fish and he'll steal your gear and sell it)
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To: Kaslin

“Still Not Clear Which Party Will Lose the House”

It won’t be “clear” until all the actual VOTES/BALLOTS are counted and verified.

You can not predict the future. It’s IN THE FUTURE! You can only GUESS. If you (so-called) “predict” something and then it happens, you didn’t “predict the future”, you just GUESSED correctly. BFG.


25 posted on 08/10/2018 10:57:35 AM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts)
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To: faucetman

correction: BFD


26 posted on 08/10/2018 10:58:24 AM PDT by faucetman (Just the facts, ma'am, Just the facts)
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To: skimbell

It is critical and the importance is not being lost.


27 posted on 08/10/2018 11:00:10 AM PDT by laplata (Liberals/Progressives have diseased minds.)
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To: sergeantdave

Big deal. That’s how the man makes his living.


28 posted on 08/10/2018 11:04:00 AM PDT by laplata (Liberals/Progressives have diseased minds.)
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To: Kaslin
Still Not Clear Which Party Will Lose the House

Meaning, it's perfectly clear and the MSM just doesn't want to admit it. :)

29 posted on 08/10/2018 11:35:48 AM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ([CTRL]-[GALT]-[DELETE])
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To: laplata
"Barone is getting old and losing his edge. He was the best in his field a few years ago."

IIRC he predicted that Romney would win in 2012. (He wasn't alone, Gallup did, too, but they dropped out of the presidential election polling business after 2012.)

30 posted on 08/10/2018 1:07:42 PM PDT by Sooth2222 (Hanlon's Razor: "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.")
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To: Sooth2222

I should have said “more than a few years ago”. lol


31 posted on 08/10/2018 2:41:14 PM PDT by laplata (Liberals/Progressives have diseased minds.)
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To: CaptainKip
DESERVES A REPEAT

... these recent were not even primaries... they were special elections. So, far, we are 9 for 10 on special elections.
They were held in the middle of August. Anybody who has a job is on vacation during the middle of August.
The GOP will turnout in record numbers in Nov when it counts, because we know what is at stake. Blue wave???... nonsense.

32 posted on 08/11/2018 5:56:48 AM PDT by Liz ( Our side has 8 trillion bullets; the other side doesn't know which bathroom to use.)
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